Cannabis in Mexico Is Moving Towards Legalization

Mexico’s cannabis laws are starting to shift toward legalization. This post from GreenCamp discusses how Mexico has been under the radar lately as the country recently made great progress towards legalizing cannabis.

If you were to step on just about any beach on the Pacific coast, north of Guatemala, you’d step onto the grounds where cannabis is legal, or at least will be very soon.

They were looking for a simple way to get high on a party, and brickweed was the cheapest.

I’ve left college 5 years ago and I’ve asked people that are still there about the cannabis situation, and guess what—nothing changed.

Mexican brickweed is still omnipresent in Iowa and other places where cannabis is illegal.

Can Mexico’s legal weed industry compete?

So, is there going to be a way for the legal industry to push out the black market in Mexico?

Well, the real question here isn’t if the black market will be pushed out, because I honestly don’t think it will.

The real question is how the legal market will fare against the legal markets in Canada and the United States, once it opens.

Canada, the United States, and Mexico have a long-standing free trade agreement that was up until recently called NAFTA, but now it’s called USMCA.

If all three countries federally legalize cannabis, the cannabis trade among these three countries could be immense.

Seeing how Mexico has the absolute lowest cost of production when it comes to cannabis, and cost of labor, it is the perfect place for American and Canadian licensed producers to move their production centers south of the border.

Both America and Canada did that with their car industries and many other that are already legal. I don’t see why wouldn’t they do the same with the new “cash crop”.